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I would use the #36 AWG wire, especially if the label refers to it as #36 SN, or single coated insulation. You will need 88 strands and six inches to come close to what I use. There will be a slight increase in RAC but not enough to have to make big changes to accommodate. Stick two smooth nails, 3 inches apart, into a block of wood and cut the heads off. Tape the end of the coil wire next to one nail, to one side and a little beyond the actual nail and wrap the thing around both nails 88 times. Then place a 1/8 inch wide strip of crepe paper masking tape over all of the wires on one side of the post where you taped your start wire down, just to the inside of the nail. Then gather up the start wire and tape it and all of the other side wires together on the other side of the nail, just to the inside of the nail, away from the actual loop curves. These should be a fairly tight bundles and both at the same end where the start wire and end wire ended up.Here is the solder pot:$30 from MCMKinda skanky, the dross on top:Yes, there is solder in there:Set-up at 3 inches using drywall screws:88 wraps of number 36 magnet wire:Remove the loop of wire and cut it between the two, relatively close together tape wraps. You should now have a 6 inch plus length of cable . You cannot emulate a Litz type 1 twist, but that should not present a problem. Tin the open ends of this cable. Use a liquid flux if you have one and cut it with 99.99% pure isopropyl alcohol from your local drug store until it resembles weak tea in color. This mixture will ablate the wire insulation and tin the wires very quickly. Dip it past the tape and when the brown goop stops rising, remove the wire and wipe it in a double folded cotton shop towel from just above the solder to the cable end. This will squeeze the excess solder and burnt insulation out, leaving an ugly spot on the rag. Do this to both ends of the cable.Here is my concoction of acid flux and methanol - all I had handy:Taped and cut and ready for dipping:There's the ugliness after burning off the coating and partially soldering the ends. I re-dipped these again after some paste flux:Twist the length of cable at least two full turns down it's length and try to keep it from untwisting (not easy). Now take an appropriate size of shrink tube and cut a 0.9 inch piece off, fold the cable in the middle and slip the tube over the two parts. Then solder the two dipped ends together and attach them to a short piece of tinned copper wire, either solid or stranded and go hook it up to your speaker ground lug. Make two of these of course.Here is the before and after twist:And a clear piece of shrink tubing prior to shrinking:Bud
Pete, I still consider that second one a loop. I did see that and that's why I wrote "or at least the two lengths separated.". The image later in the thread shows the shrink wrap skipped, but still insulating the conductors. My main concern of your first pic with the shrink wrap was you were going to have both conductors shrunk together touching.
So the question is whether an antenna loop is required or just a loop since the wires have dielectric.
The picture of an uncovered retail unit in the Six Moons review (toward the bottom of the page) seems to present a simple loop: http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/groundcontrol/groundcontrol.html
Hi, Bud, The Cat5e DIY enhancers appear to work in my system but I can't explain the weird break-in process. I do like what they do though. I guess I may bite on true litz version after the first of the year.Scotty
You might be able to get a used pair... some folks in the last few posts of the mind blowing thread don't seem too impressed.